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Title: Atoms, the Periodic Table, Drawing Bohr Models


1
Atoms, the Periodic Table, Drawing Bohr Models
more review!
2
  • Matter has mass and takes up space.
  • Atoms are basic building blocks of matter, and
    cannot be chemically subdivided by ordinary
    means.

3
Whats an atom made of?
  • Even though an atom is really small, it is made
    of even smaller particles.
  • Its basically made of 3 tiny subatomic
    particles
  • Protons
  • Neutrons
  • Electrons

4
Parts of an atom
5
Parts of an Atom
  • Proton
  • in the nucleus
  • ( positive) charge
  • 1 amu

6
Parts of an Atom
  • Neutron in the nucleus
  • 0 (no) charge1 amu

7
Parts of an Atom
  • Electron
  • in the electron cloud
  • - (negative) charge0 amu

8
An Atoms Parts
  • The center of an atom is called the nucleus.
  • The nucleus contains 2 types of particles
  • Protons positive () charge
  • Neutrons no charge, neutral
  • This means the nucleus is always positive.

9
The Outside of the Atom
  • Surrounding the nucleus is a cloud of electrons
  • Electrons
  • spin quickly
  • Are negatively (-) charged
  • are very small.
  • Have a mass of 0 AMU.

10
Overall Balance
  • To review, an atom is made up of 3 types of
    particles which are
  • Protons ()
  • Neutrons (0)
  • Electrons (-)
  • Notice that the protons and electrons have
    opposite chargeswhat does this mean about the
    overall balance of an atom?
  • Nucleus ( charge) Electron (- charge)

11
  • REVIEW ATOMS
  • The smallest piece of an element which still has
    the properties of that element is called an atom.
  • Central core is called a NUCLEUS , and has a
    charge.
  • It is surrounded by an Electron Cloud which has a
    - charge.
  • These 2 parts balance each other out so that the
    atom is electrically neutral(or has NO electric
    charge)

12
  • The number of protons in an atom is called the
    atomic number.
  • The elements in the periodic table are arranged
    according to increasing atomic number.
  • It is the number of protons that determines the
    atomic number H (element hydrogen) 1.
  • The number of protons in an element is constant
    (H1, for 1 proton, 2 He helium, for 2 protons
    and so on. Argon Ar is number 18)

13
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14
  • This procedure NEVER changes.
  • The protons are the atomic number.
  • They identify the element.
  • The number of protons is equal to the number of
    electrons so that the element is electrically
    stable
  • (or balanced)
  • The number of protons IS the Atomic Number

15
  • Mass Number the sum of protons ADDED to the
    neutrons.
  • Mass number can vary for the same element, if
    the element has different numbers of neutrons.
  • When this happens, these forms of an element are
    called isotopes.
  • Atomic Mass is the weighted AVERAGE of the masses
    of ALL the natural occurring isotopes

16
Quick Review
  • ATOMIC MASS The mass of an atom depends on the
    number of protons neutrons it contains. It is
    the weighted AVERAGE.
  • AMU Atomic mass unit
  • Mass number it is the sum of the protons
    neutrons.
  • Neutrons mass number - atomic number
  • ( remember Atomic Number NUMBER of protons,
    which NUMBER of electrons)

17
What about electrons shells?
  • The region around the nucleus is called the
    electron cloud.
  • The electrons occupy certain energy levels.
  • The farther an energy level from the nucleus, the
    more energy the electrons will have in it.
  • 1st level 2 electrons
  • 2nd level 8 electrons
  • 3rd level holds 8 but 18 electrons are allowed

18
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19
The Periodic Table Review
20
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21
Youve got your Periods
  • Periods rows
  • From left to right
  • What do elements in a row have in common?
  • the same number of electron shells
  • Every element in Period 1 (1st row) has 1 shell
    for its electrons (H He)
  • All of the elements in period 2 have two shells
    for their electrons.
  • It continues like this all the way down the table

22
And Youve got your groups
  • Column group families
  • What do elements in a group have in common?
  • same number of valence electrons (electrons in
    the outer shell)
  • Every element in group 1 (1st column) has 1
    valence electron
  • Every element in group 2 has 2 valence electrons.
  • In fact, if you know the groups number, you
    automatically know how many valence electrons it
    has!

23
Group Labels
  • The transition elements get grouped together as
    the B elements, or groups 1B - 8B.
  • All of the other elements are A elements, with
    groups 1A - 8A.
  • These are also called Families, and Families
    stick together!
  • Using this labeling system will tell you exactly
    how many valence electrons are in the atoms.

24
Metals, Metalloids, Nonmetals
25
Family 1 or 1A Alkali Metals
  • 1 valence electron
  • Very Reactive
  • Li , Na , K , Rb, Cs, Fr

26
Family 2 or 2A Alkaline Earth Metals
  • 2 valence electrons
  • very reactive, but less than alkali metals
  • Be, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba, Ra

27
Group 13 The Boron Group
  • 3 valence electrons in the outer energy level
  • One metalloid and 4 metals
  • Reactive
  • Solid at room temperature
  • Most common element in this group is aluminum
  • B, Al, Ga, In, Tl

28
14 or 4A Carbon Family
  • 4 valence electrons
  • 1 metal, 1 metalloid, and 2 nonmetals.
  • This family is incredibly important in the field
    of technology.
  • C, Si, Ge, Sn, Pb

29
15 or 5A Nitrogen Family
  • 5 valence electrons
  • 2 nonmetals, 2 metalloids, 1 metal
  • Reactivity varies
  • N, P, As, Sb, Bi

30
16 or 6A Oxygen Family
  • 6 valence electrons
  • O, S, Se, Te, Po
  • 3 nonmetals, 1 metalloid, 1 metal
  • reactive
  • Most members form covalent (sharing bonds)
    compounds
  • Must share 2 electrons with other elements to
    form compounds.

31
Family 17 or 7B Halogens
  • 7 valence electrons
  • F, Cl, Br, I, At
  • very reactive
  • They are very reactive because have 7 valence
    electrons, this means they are ALMOST full and
    can combine with many elements.
  • Nonmetals
  • Halogen elements combine with metals to form
    compounds called salts.

32
Family 18 or 8A Noble Gases
  • 8 valence electrons (except He which only has 2)
  • Happy because their outer electron shell is
    filled!
  • NON REACTIVE (inert)gases
  • Nonmetals
  • NO bonding with other elements
  • He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe

33
Hydrogen stands alone
  • Gas,
  • reactive,
  • 1 electron in outer level.
  • Hydrogen does not match properties of any single
    group so it is placed above Group 1.
  • It can give it's electron away with ionic
    bonding,
  • or share it's electron in covalent bonding

34
Family 3-12 (1B-8B) Transition Metals
  • 1-2 valence electrons
  • Less reactive than alkaline earth metals because
    they dont give away their electrons as easily
  • Bottom 2 row are the Lanthanide Actinide series

35
Family 3-12 (1B-8B) Transition Metals
  • Lanthanide Series
  • shiny reactive metals
  • Most found in nature
  • Actinides Series
  • radioactive and unstable
  • Most are man-made not stable in nature

36
How to Draw Bohr Model Diagrams You will need to
know this For the Quiz tomorrow
37
Bohr Diagrams
  1. Find your element on the periodic table.
  2. Determine the number of electrons it is the
    same as the atomic number.
  3. This is how many electrons you will draw.

38
Bohr Diagrams
  • Find out which period (row) your element is in.
  • Elements in the 1st period have one energy level.
  • Elements in the 2nd period have two energy
    levels, and so on.

www.chem4kids.com
39
Bohr Diagrams
  1. Draw a nucleus with the element symbol, proton
    number neutron total inside.
  2. Carbon is in the 2nd period, so it has two energy
    levels, or shells.
  3. Draw the shells around the nucleus.

C6P 6N 0
40
Bohr Diagrams
  1. Add the electrons.
  2. Carbon has 6 electrons.
  3. The first shell can only hold 2 electrons.

C6P 6N 0
41
Bohr Diagrams
  1. Since you have 2 electrons already drawn, you
    need to add 4 more.
  2. These go in the 2nd shell.
  3. Add one at a time -starting on the right side and
    going counter clock-wise.

C6P 6N 0
42
Bohr Diagrams
  1. Check your work.
  2. You should have 6 total electrons for Carbon.
  3. Only two electrons can fit in the 1st shell.
  4. The 2nd shell can hold up to 8 electrons.
  5. The 3rd shell can hold 18, but the elements in
    the first few periods only use 8 electrons.

C
43
Bohr Diagrams You Try It!
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H
  • He
  • O
  • Al
  • Ne
  • K

C
44
Bohr Diagrams
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H 1 electron
  • He
  • O
  • Al
  • Ne
  • K

H
H1P 0N 0
45
Bohr Diagrams
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H
  • He - 2 electrons
  • O
  • Al
  • Ne
  • K

He
He2P 2N 0
46
Bohr Diagrams
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H
  • He
  • O - 8 electrons
  • Al
  • Ne
  • K

O
O8P 8N 0
47
Bohr Diagrams
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H
  • He
  • O
  • Al - 13 electrons
  • Ne
  • K

Al
Al13P 14N 0
48
Bohr Diagrams
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H
  • He
  • O
  • Al
  • Ne - 10 electrons
  • K

Ne
Ne10P 10N 0
49
Bohr Diagrams
  • Try the following elements on your own
  • H
  • He
  • O
  • Al
  • Ne
  • K - 19 electrons

K
K19 P 20 N 0
50
Chp 14 BondingLittle Book pg 8
Show the arrows for ionic bonding the ion
chargesShow the bonding circles for covalent
bonding
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